Noted Ring Names: Dean Ambrose, Jon MoxleyFrom: Cincinnati, OhioDate of Birth: December 7, 1985Wrestling Debut: 2005WWE Debut: Survivor Series 2012WWE Titles Held: WWE World Heavyweight Championship, United States Championship, Intercontinental Championship (x2), WWE RAW Tag Team Championship (w/Seth Rollins)Mini Biography: Dean Ambrose started his career back in 2004 under the name of Jon Moxley. Earning high praise from independent companies around the world, he became a household name for the hardcore, holding championship gold in companies such as Combat Zone Wrestling. With his name capturing the attention of wrestling fans across the globe, Jon soon earned a developmental contract with the WWE. He then took on the name of Dean Ambrose and began the process of cementing his name in stone. Feuding with William Regal and Seth Rollins most notably on NXT, Ambrose went on to make his much anticipated main roster debut at Survivor Series 2012, coming in alongside Seth Rollins and Roman Reigns to make a massive impact in the main event, aiding CM Punk in retaining his WWE Championship. The Shield tore an unstoppable path through the WWE for over a year before going their separate ways and into singles competition. Dean first went after Shield traitor Seth Rollins for revenge, and then on to win Intercontinental and WWE World Heavyweight Gold. Described as “Fearless, wild and always unpredictable” as well as a “world class competitor and infamous troublemaker” – Dean Ambrose is the star to watch!Full Biography:Click Here!Full Statistics:Click Here!

Dean DOES NOT have a secondary Twitter, Facebook or other internet profile, any you may find should be reported as fakes no matter how convincing they appear to be. Click here to hear Dean confirm this HIMSELF on this Podcast and also on Colt Cabanas Podcast HERE!. ALL Official links can be found and confirmed on this site.

LIVE EVENT SCHEDULE

TBA:: Dean is currently out with injury. ETA 9 Months (Sept 2018)

UPCOMING APPEARANCES

Friday March 16th: Omaha, Nebraska6pm – 8pmGeneral Admission: $18.00*Children (6-12): $6.00**Purchase of a ticket does NOT guarantee an autograph from special celebrity guests.
Autographs are free, you need a General Admission ticket to enter and only a set number of people will be accepted so make sure you get there early to secure your spot in the queue!
More details including how to get discounts on tickets HERE

Sunday March 18th: Winnipeg, Manitoba1pm – 3pmGeneral Admission: $16.75*Children (6-12): $6.25**Purchase of a ticket does NOT guarantee an autograph from special celebrity guests.
Autographs are free, you need a General Admission ticket to enter and only a set number of people will be accepted so make sure you get there early to secure your spot in the queue!
More details including how to get discounts on tickets HERE

Friday March 23rd: Salt Lake City, Utah6pm – 8pmGeneral Admission: $18.00*Children (6-12): $6.00**Purchase of a ticket does NOT guarantee an autograph from special celebrity guests.
Autographs are free, you need a General Admission ticket to enter and only a set number of people will be accepted so make sure you get there early to secure your spot in the queue!
More details including how to get discounts on tickets HERE

Wrestlemania AxxessAxxess Day 4Sunday, April 8
Dean Ambrose – 10 a.m.
Tickets for this year’s WrestleMania Axxess celebration will be available at Ticketmaster.com

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Dean recently spoke to GuideLive.Com in Dallas, Texas about the live event in Arlington Texas, where he spoke about live events vs TV, teaming with Seth again, what it’s like being in the ring with someone like Braun Strowman and more. Below is the full interview, you can also view the original article here

What’s different about performing a mid-week ‘WWE Live’ show as opposed to an episode of Raw or Smackdown on TV?
Ambrose: I live for the house shows. It’s more of an intimate experience because every one is a little bit different. It’s only going to happen that one time in the arena for that audience.

The live events are what I dreamed of when I wanted to be a wrestler as a kid. There’s a lot less restrictions, time constraints, commercials. There’s no somebody standing out there with a microphone, talking for 20 minutes, driving you crazy. There’s no commercial breaks. There’s no ads popping up on the screen. It’s just, straight up, a night of pro wrestling – WWE style. … The live events are my personal favorite type of show we have. It’s not something you want to miss.

The show at College Park is just a few miles away from the site of WrestleMania 32 (AT&T Stadium). What do you remember about that event?

Ambrose: It was really wild, man. The best way I can describe WrestleMania is just ‘surreal.’
I remember pulling up to that stadium, in particular, seeing the 200-foot picture of my face plastered on there – my brain can’t even process that it was so weird. And when you walk out in front of 100,000 people, your brain can’t comprehend that big of an audience – at least mine can’t.
It doesn’t really feel any different once you’re in the ring. Once you’re in the ring, it’s like you’re in the eye of the storm. There’s nothing really outside of the first couple of rows of people you can see. But the sound is different because there’s 100,000 people there, it’s like this giant, vacuumous, weird sound. It’s very strange.
You build up to it all year, and then it’s over so quick. It’s very surreal. I’ve wrestled in front of as little as like ten people or less when I first started … and that’s a lot more awkward than wrestling in front of 100,000 people.

You’ve rejoined former Shield partner Seth Rollins in this current title run, what has it been like being back together?

Ambrose: We’re having a lot of fun, I’ve got to tell you, the last two PPVs – “No Mercy’ and ‘SummerSlam’ – been very, very happy with the matches we’ve had with Cesaro and Sheamus, who are also a great team. Probably underrated. They’re No. 2 to us, of course, but we’ve been having some great matches.
The thing about me and Seth Rollins, we take our reputation as former partners in The Shield – we have a certain standard when it comes to tag team wrestling. Our thing was the second you put us together, we instantly become the best tag team in the world and we have to live up to that every single night. That’s how we got our start. That’s how we got to where we are just by having kick-ass matches every night.

Any tag teams in WWE you’re wanting to go head-to-head with?

Ambrose: I really appreciate the experience of getting to work with Cesaro and Sheamus. They’re just a great team. But also, I really have enjoyed the time we’ve got to be in the ring with [Karl] Anderson and [Luke] Gallows, The Club. I think this is going to be a good year for them. I think they’re really going to start catching on with the audience, come into their own as a team. They’re an excellent couple of wrestlers … Karl Anderson is a guy I’ve known since I was probably 18, and I think the first time I wrestled him was here in WWE. Really enjoyed it. I hope we get to have more matches with The Club.

On his ‘No Mercy’ match which saw two of Cesaro’s front teeth pushed ‘3 to 4 mm’ into his upper jaw after an in-ring maneuver…

Ambrose: I didn’t know that his teeth were busted out until after the match. I saw his face after the match backstage. I thought he just bit his lip or had a little, tiny cut, a little bit of blood … The thing is, we’re so safety conscious, and in WWE they really go out of their way to protect us as athletes. If they think we’re hurt, they’re going to try to stop the match no matter how much we’re telling them we want to continue. … But thankfully, the referee got it under control, got the blood stopped, and then you just keep going.
Cesaro, I know, would have never for one second want to stop the match and go get his teeth fixed because we’re just wired differently as athletes. Compared to like NFL, NBA players and so forth, those guys are pansies, sorry, we do this 365 days a year. We voluntarily beat each other up for a living. Nobody does the schedule that we do on the pace that we do. We’re just machines, professional wrestlers as a whole. Just another day at the office.

On wrestling somebody like 6’8″, 385-pound (listed) Braun Strowman…

Ambrose: If you’ve ever been a little kid at the zoo, and they let you ride the elephant…what’s the biggest thing you can think of that you would climb up on when you’re a little kid? It’s like that. You’re literally a child when you’re in there, it’s foolish, he just picks me up like I’m Jiminy Cricket and I can’t do anything about it.
That’s the fun thing about WWE, we’ve got all shapes and sizes. To think I can get in there with smaller, athletic guys and try to keep up, but then sometimes you’ve got to get in there with big dinosaurs. I feel like, more often than not, I’m in there with big dinosaurs – the story of my life. Just walking around, all 6’2″ of me, and just walking around all these giant behemoths, pretty much just trying not to get stepped on. It’s like I’m living in Jurassic Park.

Dean spoke with the Huntington Herald Dispatch and discussed The Shield, live events, championships and Renee. Check out an excerpt below and the link to the full article HERE

When Ambrose came onto the WWE scene in 2012 as part of The Shield with Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins, Ambrose started being described as “The Lunatic Fringe.” Outside the ring, Ambrose passes for sane. Inside the ring, given his talent and connection to fans, the nickname has helped him become a headliner on the WWE roster.

That character will be on display Saturday, July 15, when the WWE Live SummerSlam Heatwave Tour makes a stop at the Big Sandy Superstore Arena. Tickets for the 7:30 p.m. show range from $20 to $100 and are available at the Big Sandy Superstore Arena box office, via Ticketmaster.com or by calling 800-745-3000.

Ambrose and Seth Rollins are set to take on The Miztourage of Bo Dallas and Curtis Axel.

“I feel like I’m a pretty sensible individual,” Ambrose said in a telephone interview. “I don’t feel unhinged (another characterization). It is what it is. Michael Cole (WWE announcer on “Monday Night Raw” and pay-per-views) said it on TV enough times it clicked. I’m used to it. You know you get labels put on. In the ring, I don’t care. I fly by the seat of my pants, do whatever I feel like doing. Don’t worry about the consequences.”

Ambrose was raised in Cincinnati but now calls Las Vegas home. He was fearless at the outset on the independent circuit in the early 2000s with the ring name Jon Moxley. He could take punishment and dish it out all the way to the top in WWE. He’s also done a movie with John Cena and Randy Orton.

“It’s tough in any line of work to get to the top,” Ambrose said. “You can’t quit when times get rough. Things are going to happen to you. You have to believe in your abilities to do the stuff and put your nose to the grindstone. I could get hit by a bus tomorrow. I’ve had an incredible journey. I love to do what I’m doing. I’ve been fortunate to travel the world. All kinds of memories, stories.”

The Shield hit it big when they came onto the WWE scene. As time passed, storylines had the trio split and go to singles. Ambrose has had to face Reigns and Rollins on several occasions.

“They threw us right to the wolves. We clicked immediately,” Ambrose said. “We go week to week. We’d figure it out, did a lot on the fly. It all worked out. It’s a means to an end. Three new guys come in and kick the door down. It’s very rare three personalities work like that. You could tell we resonate with people. I’ve made way more money, got a lot more things done, a lot more work without them.”

Ambrose said he and Rollins look forward to the tag match. Axel and Dallas played a role in The Miz beating Ambrose at the Great Balls of Fire pay-per-view Sunday, July 9, to retain the Intercontinental championship.

“We’ve got issues after Sunday,” Ambrose said. “Plan is to go in and slap them around. Drop them on their heads and teach them a lesson.”

More from Wrestlemanias Media Morning and Dean discusses Wrestlemania moments and favorite matches.

Dean Ambrose on life in the WWE (News.Com.Au)

Both Dean and Daniel Bryan were recently interviewed below is Dean’s portion of the interview, which includes him talking about various Wrestlemania moments both professional and personal:

‘IT’S AN ENERGY THAT WILL ALWAYS STAND OUT’

WrestleMania 33 will begin on Monday (AEST) in front of 75,000 fans in Orlando.

In 2016, over 100,000 packed into Cowboys Stadium for the sports entertainment showpiece, setting a new indoor attendance record.

But just what does it feel like to walk out and perform in front of that many people?

WWE star Dean Ambrose heard his first WrestleMania crowd at New York’s MetLife Stadium in 2013, when he made his debut as part of The Shield, alongside Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins.

The trio were being snuck out from a backstage area so they could perform their traditional entrance through the crowd. They were placed in a holding area waiting for the music to hit, signalling their entrance, but Ambrose says the wall of noise that met the stars was unlike anything he’d experienced before.

“We just walked underneath the stadium and came out but there was no music playing yet or anything — we were just getting staged,” Ambrose recalls.

“Once we got out into the stadium, there was this buzz, a vibration that you could feel, literally feel in your body, when no music was playing, no nothing.

“It was just the rumble of 80,000 people. It creates such a physical buzz of energy that will always stand out to me, I will never forget it.”

A WrestleMania appearance solidified a dream come true for the former WWE champion, given Ambrose’s love of wrestling career was fostered while watching some of the great WrestleMania moments in his youth.

“I liked the Bret Hart-Shawn Michaels Ironman match (from WrestleMania 12), it was one of my favourites. I used to watch that over and over and over when I was a little kid,” Ambrose says.

‘It was very impressive to me the whole Ironman thing and Bret Hart-Austin (WrestleMania 13), that was just a great intense, awesome match. Two of my favourites and standouts.”

The 31-year-old is entering his fifth WrestleMania and will defend his Intercontinental Title against Baron Corbin at WrestleMania, but there’s another match he’ll be keeping a close eye on come Monday.

“I’d like to see what kind of weird stuff Bray Wyatt and Randy Orton get into. I feel like it’s a very weird situation going on,” Ambrose said.

“Houses are being burnt down, ghosts, witches apparently, I feel like something cool is going to happen”.